niYersily ol the State o! New York Bnlleti 

Entered as second-class matter August 2, 1913, at the Post Office at Albany, N. Y^ 
under the act of August 24, 1912 . 

Published fortnightly 

No. 683 ALBANY N. Y. April i, 19^9 

Attendance DiTision -wi.<^^'8^lfiU j-^^iu^itJiiU^i^j 

COMPULSORY EDUCATION 

Article 23 of the Education Law (L. 1910', ch. 140, as cimeTtdeA 
hy L. 1911, ch. 710; L. 1913, chs. 101, 511, 748; L. ISIT, 
c/i. 563; X. 1918, ch. 415; a.? amended hy L. 1919, c/r. 232.) 

Article 22 o/ /Ae Education Law {as amended hy L. 191^, 
ch. 531). 

COMPULSORY EDUCATION 

Section 620 Instruction required \ 

621 Required attendance upon instruction 

622 When a boy is required to attend evening school 

623 Instruction elsewhere than at a public school 

624 Duties of persons in patemaP relation to children 

625 Penalty for failure to perform paternal^ duty 

626 Unlawful employment of children and penalty 

therefor 

627 Employer must display record certificate and eveii- 

ing, part-time or continuation school certificate 

628 Punishment for unlawful employment of chiidjea 

629 Teachers must keep record of attendance 

630 School record certificate 

631 Evening, part-time or continuation school certificate 

632 Attendance officers 
' 633 Arrest of truants 

634 Interference with attendance officers 

635 Truant schools 

636 Enforcement of law and withholding the State 

moneys by Commissiower of Education 

637 Attendance of illiterate minors 

638 Certificates of principals or teachers 

601 (Article 22) Part-time or continuation schools. 
§ 620 Instruction required. The instruction required under 
this article shall be: 



1 So in original. 
C19r-J 119-7000 (7-829) 



^^f^tpb 



1 At a public school in which at least the six common school 
branches of reading, spelling, writing, arithmetic, English lan- 
guage and geography are taught in English. 

2 Elsewhere than a public school upon instruction in the same 
subjects taught in English by a competent teacher. 

§ 621 Required attendance upon instruction. 1 Every child 
within the compulsory school ages, in proper physical and mental 
condition to attend school, residing in a city or school district 
having a population of five thousand or more and employing a 
superintendent of schools, shall regularly attend upon instruction 
as follows: 

a Each child between seven and fourteen years of age shall 
attend the entire time during which the school attended is in 
session, which period shall not be less than one hundred and eighty 
days of actual school, 

h Each child between fourteen and sixteen years of age not 
regularly and lawfully engaged in any useful employment or 
service, and to whom an employment certificate has not been 
duly issued under the provisions of the labor law, shall so attend 
the entire time during which the school attended is in session. 
[Subdivision ainetided by L. 1917, ch. 563.] 

2 Every such child, residing elsewhere than in a city or school 
district having a population of five thousand or more and employ- 
ing a superintendent of schools, shall attend upon instruction 
during the entire time that the school in the district shall be in 
session, as follows: 

a Each child between eight and fourteen years of age. 

h Each child betAveen fourteen and sixteen years of age not 
regularly and lawfully engaged in any useful emplo;>^nent or 
service. [Subdivision mnended by L. 1913, ch. 511.] 

3. The provisions of this section are intended to include all 
blind children, except such as may i-eceive appointments under 
the provisions of article thirty-eight of this chapter. [Amended 
hy L. 191 J. ch. YlO.] 

4. A child within the prescribed ages as provided by this sec- 
tion shall be deemed in proper physical and m^ental condition to 
attend ur)on instruction unless a certificate shall have been issued 
by the school authorities that the child is not in proper physical 
and mental condition to so attend. N^o physical condition which 
is capable of correction shall avail as a defense under the pro- 
visions of this article unless it shall be made to appear that all 
reasonable measures of the correction of the condition and the 

©; of s. 

SEP 29 1919 



i^'t ^v 



3 



suitable instruction of the child have been taken. [Added hy 
L. 1919, ch. 232.] 

§ 622 When a boy is required to attend evening school. 1 Every 
boy between fourteen and sixteen years of age, in a city of the 
first class or a city of the second class in possession of an employ- 
ment certificate duly issued under the provisions of the labor law, 
who has not completed such course of study as is required for 
graduation from the elementary public schools of such city, and 
who does not hold either a certificate of graduation from the 
public elementary school or the preacademic certificate issued by 
the Regents or the certificate of the completion of an elementary 
course issued by the Education Department, shall attend the 
public evening schools of such city, or other evening schools 
offering an equivalent course of instruction, for not less than six 
hours each week, for a period of not less than sixteen weeks. 

2 When the board of education in a city or district shall have 
established part-time and continuation schools or courses of 
instruction for the education of young persons between fourteen 
and sixteen years of age who are regularly employed in such city 
or district, said board of education may require the attendance 
in such schools or on such courses of instruction of any young 
person in such a city or district who is in possession of an employ- 
ment certificate duly issued under the provisions of the labor law, 
who has not completed such courses of study as are required for 
graduation from the elementary public schools of such city or 
district or equivalent courses of study in parochial or other 
elementary schools, who does not hold either a certificate of 
graduation from the public elementary school or a preacademic 
certificate of the completion of the elementary course issued by 
the Education Department, and who is not otherwise receiving 
instruction approved by the board of education as equivalent to 
that provided for in the schools and courses of instruction estab- 
lished under the provisions of this act. The required attendance 
provided for in this paragraph shall be for a total of not less than 
thirty-six weeks per year, at the rate of not le^s than four and not 
more than eight hours per week, and shall be between the hours 
of eight o'clock in the morning and five o'clock in the afternoon 
of any working day or days. 

3 The children attending such part-time or continuation schools 
as required in paragraph two of this section shall be exempt from 
the attendance on evening schools required in paragraph one of 
this section. [Amended hy L. 1913, ch. Y48.] 

§ 623 Instruction elsewhere than at a public school. If any 



suck child shall so attend upon instruction elsewhere than at 
a public school, such instruction shall be at least substantially 
equivalent to the instruction given children of like age at the 
jDublic school of the city or district in which such child resides; 
and such attendance shall be for at least as many hours each day 
thereof as are required of children of like age at public schools; 
and no greater total amount of holidays or vacations shall be 
deducted from such attendance during the period such attendance 
is required than is allowed in such public school to children of 
like age. Occasional absences from such attendance, not amount- 
ing to irregular attendance in the fair meaning of the term, shall 
be allowed upon such excuses only as would be allowed in like 
cases by the general rules and practice of such public school. 
If a child required to attend upon instruction as provided in 
this article does not attend at a public, private or parochial school 
maintained in the city or district in which the parent or guardian 
of said child resides, such parent or guardian shall upon request 
furnish satisfactory proof to the local school authorities of said 
city or district that said child or ward is attending upon lawful 
instruction elsewhere. [Amended hy L. 1917, ch. 5G3.] 

§ 624 Duties of persons in parental relation to children. Every 
person in parental relation to a child within the compulsory 
school ages and in proper physical and mental condition to attend 
school, shall cause such child to attend upon instruction, as 
follows : 

1. In cities and school districts having a population of five thou- 
sand or above, every child between seven and sixteen years of age 
as required by section six hundred and twenty-one of this act 
unless an employment certificate shall have been duly issued to 
such child under the provisions of the labor law and he is regu- 
larly employed thereunder. 

2 Elsewhere than in a city or school district having a popula- 
tion of five thousand or above, every child between eight and 
sixteen years of age, unless such child shall have received an 
employment certificate duly issued under the provisions of the 
labor law and is regularly employed thereunder in a factory or 
mercantile establishment; business or telegraph office, restaurant, 
hotel, apartment house or in the distribution or transmission of 
merchandise or messages, or unless such child shall have received 
the school record certificate issued under section six hundred and 
thirty of >his act and is regularly employed elsewhere than in the 
factory or mercantile establishment, business or telegraph office. 



restaurant, hotel, apartment house or in the distribution or trans- 
mission of merchandise or messages. 

§ 625 Penalty for failure to perform parental duty. A viola- 
tion of section six hundred and twenty-four shall be a misde- 
meanor, punishable for the first offense by a fine of not exceeding 
five dollars, or five days' imprisonment, and for each subsequent 
offense by a fine of not exceeding fifty dollars, or by imprisonment 
not exceeding thirty days, or by both such fine and imprisonment. 
Courts of special session and police magistrates shall, subject to 
removal as j^i'ovided in sections fifty-seven and fifty-eight of the 
Code of Criminal Procedure, have exclusive jurisdiction in the 
first instance to hear, try and determine charges of violations of 
this section within their respective jurisdictions. A duly at- 
tested transcript of the record of attendance and absence of a child 
which has been kept by a teacher, as provided in section 629 
of this chapter, shall be accepted as presumptive evidence of the 
attendance of such child in any proceeding brought under the 
provisions of this article. [Amended hy L. 1919, ch. 232.] 

§ 626 Unlawful employment of children and penalty therefor. 
It shall be unlawful for any person, firm or corporation : 

1 To employe ^ any child under fourteen years of age, in any 
business or sei-vice whatever, for any part of the term during 
which the public schools of the district or city in which the child 
resides are in session. 

2 To employ, elsewhere than in a city of the first class or a 
city of the second class, in a factory or mercantile establishment, 
business or telegraph office, restaurant, hotel, apartment house or 
in the distribution or transmission of merchandise or messages, 
any child between fourteen and sixteen years of age who does not 
at the time of such employment present an employment certifi- 
cate duly issued under the provisions of the labor law, or to 
employ any such child in any other ca^pacity who does not at the 
time of such employment present a school record certificate as 
provided in section six hundred and thirty of this chapter. 

3 To employ any child between fourteen and sixteen years of 
age in a city of the first class or a city of the second class who 
does not, at the time of such employment, present an employment 
certificate, duly issued under the provisions of the labor law. 

§ 627 Employer must display record certificate and evening, part- 
time or continuation school certificate. The employer of any child 
between fourteen and sixteen years of age in a city or district 

1 So in original. 



shall keep and shall display in the place where such child is 
employed, the employment certificate and also his evening, part- 
time or continuation school certificate issued by the school author- 
ities of said city or district or by an authorized representative of 
such school authorities, certifying that the said child is regularly 
in attendance at an evening, part-time or continuation school of 
said city as provided in section six hundred and thirty-one of this 
chapter. [Amended hy L. 1913, ch. 748.] 

§ 628 Punishment for unlawful employment of children. Any 
person, firm, or corporation, or any officer, manager, superintend- 
ent or employee acting therefor, who shall employ any child con- 
trary to the provisions of sections six hundred and twenty-six 
and six hundred and twenty-seven hereof, shall be guilty of a mis- 
demeanor and the punishment therefor shall be for the first offense 
a fine of not less than twenty dollars nor more than fifty dollars ; 
for a second and each subsequent offense, a fine of not less than 
fifty dollars nor more than two hundred dollars. [Amended hy 
L. 1913, ch. 748.] 

§ 629 Teachers must keep record of attendance. An accurate 
record of the attendance of all children between seven and six- 
teen years of age shall be kej)t by the teacher of every school, 
showing each day by the year, month, day of the month and day 
of the week, such attendance, and the number of hours in each 
day thereof; and each teacher upon whose instruction any such 
child shall attend elsewhere than at school, shall keep a like record 
of such attendance. Such record shall, at all times, be open to the 
attendance officers or other persons duly authorized by the school 
authorities of the city or district, who may ini^pect or copy the 
same; and every such teacher shall fully answer all inquiries 
lawfully made by such authorities, inspectors, or other persons, 
and a wilful neglect or refusal so to answer any such inquiry 
shall be a misdemeanor. 

§ 630 School record certificate. 1 A school record certificate 
shall contain a statement certifying that a child has regularly 
attended the public schools, or schools equivalent thereto, or 
parochial schools, for not less than one hundred and thirty days 
during the twelve months next preceding his fourteenth birthday 
or during the twelve months next preceding his application for 
such school record, and has completed the work in reading, writ- 
ing, spelling, arithmetic, English language and geography, in 
English, prescribed for the first six years of the public elementary 
school or parochial school or school of equal rank maintaining an 
equivalent course of study in which the branches specified in 



subdivision one of section six hundred and twenty of this chapter 
are taught in English. Such record shall also give the date of 
birth and residence of the child, as shown on the school records, 
and the name of the child's parents, guardian or custodian. 
Such school record certificate shall be in the form prescribed or 
approved by the Commissioner of Education. 

'No school record certificate shall be issued to any child under 
fifteen years of age for the purpose of obtaining an employment 
certificate, unless such child at the age of fourteen is a graduate 
of a public elementary school or parochial school or a school of 
equal rank maintaining an equivalent course of study in which 
the branches specified in subdivision one of section six hundred 
and twenty of this chapter are taught in English ; or holds a pre- 
academic certificate issued by the Regents, or a certificate of the 
completion of an elementary course issued by the State Educa- 
tion Department. [Amended by L. 1913, ch. 101, and L. 1917, 
ch. 563.] 

2 A teacher or superintendent to whom application shall be 
made for a school record certificate required under the provisions 
of the labor law shall issue a school record certificate to any 
child who, after due investigation and examination, may be 
found to be entitled to the same as follows: 

a In a city of the first class by the principal or chief executive 
of a school. 

h In all other cities and in school districts having a population 
of five thousand or more and employing a superintendent of 
schools, by the superintendent of schools only.- 

c In all other school districts by the principal teacher of the 
school. 

d In each city or school district such certificate shall be fur- 
nished on demand to a child entitled thereto or to the board or 
commissioner of health. 

§ 631 Evenings, part-time or continuation school certificate. The 
school authorities in a city or district, or officei's designated by 
them, are hereby required to issue to each child lawfully in attend- 
ance at an evening, part-time or continuation school, an eve- 
ning, part-time or continuation school certificate at least once in 
each month during the months said evening, part-time or con- 
tinuation school is in session and at the close of the term of said 
evening, part-time or continuation school, provided that said 
child has been in attendance upon said evening school, for not 
less than six hours each week or upon said part-time or con- 
tinuation school for not less than four hours e^ch week, for such 



8 

number of weeks as will, when titkeii in connection with the 
number of weeks such evening, part-time or continuation school 
respectively, shall be in session during the remainder of the cur- 
rent or calendar year, make up a total attendance on the part of 
said child in said evening school, of not less than six hours per 
week for a period of not less than sixteen weeks or in said part- 
lime or continuation school, of not less than four hours per week 
for a period of not less than thirty-six weeks. Such certificate 
sliall state fully the period of time which the child to Avhom it is 
issued was in attendance ui)on such evening, part-time or con- 
tinuation school. [AiDCiuhd hy L. 11)13, cli. 748.] 

1 632 Attendance officers. 1 The school authorities of each 
city, union free school district, or common school district whose 
limits include in whole or in part an incorporated village, shall 
appoint and may remove at jdeasure one or more attendance 
officers of such. city or district, and shall fix their compensation 
and may prescribe their duties not inconsistent with this article 
and make 'rules and regulations for the performance thereof; and 
the superintendent of schools shall supervise the enforcement of 
this article within such city or school district. 

2 The town board of each town shall appoint, subject to the 
written approval of the school commissioner (district superinten- 
dent) of the district, one or moi-e attendance officers, whose juris- 
diction shall extend over all school districts in said town, and 
which are not by this section otherwise provided for, and shall 
fix their compensation, which shall be a town charge; and such 
attendance officers, appointed by said board, shall be removable 
at the pleasure of the school commissioner (district superinten- 
dent) in whose commissioner (supervisory) district such town is 
situated. 

§ 633 Arrest of truants. 1 The attendance officer may arrest 
without a warrant any child between seven and sixteen years of 
age who is a truant from instruction upon which he is lawfully 
required to attend within the city or district of such attendance 
officer. He shall forthwith deliver the child so arrested to a 
teacher from whom such child is then a truant, or, in case of 
habitual and incorrigible tniants, shall bring them before a police 
magistrate for commitment to a truant school as provided in sec- 
tion six hundred and thirty-five. 

2 The attendance officer shall promptly report such arrest and 
the disposition which he makes of such child, to the school author- 
ities of the said city or district where such child is lawfully 
required to attend upon instruction. 



9 

3 A truant officer in the performance of his duties may enter, 
during business hours, any factory, mercantile or other establish- 
ment within the city or school district in which he is appointed 
and shall be entitled to examine employment certificates or re- 
istry of children employed therein on demand. 

§ 634 Interference with attendance officer. Any person inter- 
fering with an attendance officer in the lawful discharge of his 
duties and any person owning or operating a factory, mercantile 
or other establishment who shall refuse on demand to exhibit to 
such attendance officer the registry of the children employed or 
the employment certificate of such children shall be guilty of a 
misdemeanor. 

§ 635 Truant schools. 1 The school authorities of any city or 
school district may establish schools, or set apart separate rooms 
in public school buildings, for children between seven and six- 
teen years of age, who are habitual truants from instruction upon 
which they are lawfully required to attend, or who are insubordi- 
nate or disorderly during their attendance upon such instruction, 
or irregular in such attendance. Such school or room shall be 
kno^vn as a truant school; but no person convicted of crimes or 
misdemeanors other than truancy, shall be committed thereto. 

2 School authorities may provide for the confinement, main- 
tenance and instruction of any child who is an habitual truant 
from instruction upon which he is lawfully required to attend, or 
is insubordinate or disorderly during attendance upon such in- 
struction, or is irregular in such attendance in such schools: and 
they or the superintendent of schools in any city or school dis- 
trict, may, after reasonable notice to such child and the persons 
in parental relation to such child, and an opportunity for them 
to be heard, and with the consent in writing of the persons in 
parental relation to such child, order such child to attend such 
school, or to be confined and maintained therein, under such 
rules and regidations as such authorities may prescribe, for 
a period not exceeding two years; but in no case shall a child 
be so confined after he is sixteen years of age. [Subdivision 
amended by L. 1917, ch. 563.] 

3 Such authorities may order such a child to be confined and 
maintained during such period in any private school, orphans' 
home or similar institution controlled by persons of the same 
religious faith as the persons in parental relation to such child, 
and which is willing and able to receive, confine and maintain 
such child, upon such terms as to compensation as may be agreed 



10 

upon between such authorities and such private school, orphans' 
home or similar institution. 

4 If the person in parental relation to such child shall not 
consent to either of such orders said persons shall be proceeded 
against in court under section six hundred and twenty-live of this 
chapter by the school authorities or such officer as they may desig- 
nate. In case the person in parental relation to such child estab- 
lishes to the satisfaction of the court that such child is beyond 
his control such child shall be proceeded against as a disorderly 
person, and upon conviction thereof, if the child was lawfully 
required to attend a public school, the child shall be sentenced 
to be confined and maintained in such truant school for a period 
not exceeding two years; or if such child was lawfully required 
to attend upon instruction otherwise than at a public school, the 
child may be sentenced to be confined and maintained for a period 
not exceeding two years in such private school, orphans' home or 
other similar institutions, if there be one, controlled by persons 
of the same religious faith as the persons in parental relation to 
such child, which is willing and able to receive, confine and main- 
tain such child for a reasonable compensation. Such confinement 
shall be conducted with a view to the improvement and to the 
restoration, as soon as practicable, of such child to the institution 
elsewhere, upon which he may be lawfully required to attend. 

4-0. An habitual truant and a child who, being subject to the 
provisions of this article, has been lawfully suspended or expelled 
from school, and is not receiving eciuivalent instruction elseAvhere, 
as provided by section six hundred and twentj-three of this chap- 
ter, are hereby declared to be ungovernable children. Any such 
child may be apprehended by a truant officer of the school district 
or city where the child resides, or by any peace officer, and 
brought before a police magistrate having jurisdiction. ^Notice 
shall thereupon be given to the child's parent, guardian, or other 
person standing in parental relation to the child, and upon the 
submission of satisfactory proof that the child is an habitual 
truant or that, being subject to this article, he has been lawfully 
suspended or expelled from school and is not receiving instruction 
elsewhere, the magistrate may commit such child to a truant 
school maintained by such district or city, or, if no such truant 
school is maintained, to a private school, orphans' home or other 
similar institution if there be one, controlled by persons of the 
same religious faith as the persons in parental relation to such 
child, which is willing: and able to receive, confine and maintain 



11 

such child for a reasonable compensation. [Suhdivision added by 
L. 1917, ch. 563.] 

5 The authorities committing any such child, and in cities and 
districts having a superintendent of schools such superintendent 
shall have authority, in his discretion^ to parole at any time any 
truant so committed by them. 

6 Every child lawfully suspended from attendance upon 
instruction for more than one week, shall be required to attend 
such truant school during the period of such suspension. 

7 The school authorities of any city or school district, not 
having a truant school, may contract with any other city or dis- 
trict having a truant school, for the confinement, maintenance and 
instruction therein of children whom such school authorities 
might require to attend a truant school, if there were one in their 
own city or district. 

8 Industrial training shall be furnished in eveiy such truant 
school. 

9 The expense attending the commitment and cost of mainte- 
nance of any truant residing in any city, or district, employing 
a superintendent of schools shall be a charge against such city, 
or district, and in all other cases shall be a county charge. 

§ 636 Enforcement of law and withholding the State moneys by 
Commissioner of Education. 1 The Commissioner of Education 
shall supervise the enforcement of this law and he may withhold 
one half of all public school moneys from any city or district, 
which, in his judgment, wilfully omits and refuses to enforce the 
provisions of this article, after due notice, so often and so long as 
such wilful omission and refusal shall, in his judgment, continue. 

2 If the provisions of this article are complied with at any 
time within one year from the date on which said moneys were 
withheld, the moneys so withheld shall be paid over by said 
Commissioner of Education to such district or city, otherwise 
forfeited to the State. 

§ 637 Attendance of Illiterate minors. 1 Every minor, between 
sixteen and twenty-one years of age, who does not possess such 
ability to speak, read and write the English language, as if? 
required, for the completion of the fifth grade of the public or 
private schools of the city or school district in which he resides, 
shall attend some day or evening school or some school maintained 
by an employer as hereinafter provided in subdivision 6 of this 
act, in the city or district in which he resides throughout the 
entire time such school is in session; provided that no such minor 



12 

be required to attend, if the Commissioner of Health, or the 
executive ofhcer of the board or department of health of the city, 
town, village or district, where such minor resides, or an officer 
thereof designated by such board, department or commissioner 
shall deem such nynor to be physically or mentally unfit to attend. 

2 Any minor subject to the provisions of this section, who 
wilfully violates any provisions of thi:^ section, shall be punished 
by a fine of not exceeding five dollars. 

3 Every person having in his control any minor subject to 
the provisions of this section shall cause such minor to attend a 
school as hereby required ; and if such i)erson fails for six sessions 
within a period of one month to cause such minor to so attend 
school, unless the Commissioner of Health or the executive officer 
of the board or department of health of the city, town, village 
or district where such minor resides or an officer thereof desig- 
nated by such board, department or commissioner shall certify 
that such minor's physical or mental condition is such as to render 
his attendance at school harmful or impracticable, such person 
shall, upon complaint by a truant officer and conviction thereof, 
be punished by a fine of not more than twenty dollars. 

4 Whoever induces or attempts to induce such minor to absent 
himself unlawfully from school or employs such minor except as 
is provided by law, or harbors such who, wdiile school is in session, 
is absent unlawfully therefrom, shall be punished by a fine of not 
more than fifty dollars. 

5 The employer of any minor subject to the provisions of this 
section shall procure from such minor and display in the place 
where such minor is employed the weekly record of regular attend- 
ance upon a school and it shall be unlawful for any person to 
employ any minor subject to the provisions of this section until 
and unless he procures and displays said weekly record as herein 
provided. It shall be the duty of the teacher or principal of the 
school upon which he (such minor) attends to provide each week 
such minor wnth a true record of attendance, 

6 Any employer may meet the requirements of this act by 
conducting a class or classes for teaching English and civics to 
foreign-born in shop, store, plant or factory, under the super- 
vision of the local school authorities, and any minor subject to the 
provisions of this act may satisfy the requirement by attendance 
upon such classes. 

§ 638 Certificates of principals or teachers. Certificates issued 
by any principal or teacher of schools as to the attendance or 
nonattendance of any person who should attend such school shall 



13 

be presumptive evidence of the facts therein stated. [Added hi/ 

L. 1919, ch. 303.] 

Note. Schools are to be in session for at least 180 days beginning 

on the first Tuesday of September. It is provided by section 492 

of the Education Law, as amended by Laws of 1913, chapter 511, 

that all schools shall be in session for 180 days, to entitle districts 

to full apportionments of public moneys, and that " in common 

school districts the term, of school shall begin each year on the 

first Tuesday of September." 

Note. Since the following provisions of Article 22 of tlie school law are 
compulsory and mandatory, the same are included herein below. 

Article 22 

Section 601 Part-time or continuation schools shall be estab- 
lished in cities and school districts. 

d The board of education of each city and of each such school 
district shall make necessary arrangements to begin to operate and 
maintain such part-time or continuation schools or classes, on the 
opening of the public schools in September 1920, and shall 
annually thereafter in September open and maintain additional 
schools and classes so that by the opening of the public schools 
in September 1925, a sufficient number of such schools shall 
have been established as to afford the required instruction under 
this affticle to those minors who are required to attend such schools 
or classes. 

e Each minor under the age of eighteen years, who is not in 
regular attendance upon a public, private or parochial school or 
who is regularly and lawfully emj^loyed in some occupation or 
service, unle:s such minor has completed a four-year secondary 
course of instruction approved by the Regents of the University, 
shall attend a part-time or continuation school or class in the city 
or district in which such minor resides or may be employed. Such 
attendance shall be for not less than four hours per week and not 
more than eight hours per week for each week which such school 
or class is in session except that the school authorities may, subject 
to the approval of the Commissioner of Education, permit any 
such minor to increase the number of hours per week of required 
attendance and decrease the number of weeks of required attend- 
ance. Such minor who is temporarily out of regular employment 
or service shall attend such school not less than twenty hours per 
week. The attendance upon a part-time or continuation school 
or class shall be between the hours of eight o'clock forenoon and 
five o'clock afternoon. 

h The parent, guardian or other person having the custody or 



14 

control of a minor who is required under the provisions of this 
article to attend a part-time or continuation school or class shall 
cause such minor to attend such school or class. A parent, guar- 
dian or other person who refuses or fails to comply with this pro- 
vision of the law shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and 
upon conviction shall be subject to a fine of not more than one 
hundred dollars or by imprisonment for not more than ten days, 
or both such fine and imprisonment at the discretion of the court. 
Any minor under sixteen years of age who fails to attend upon 
instruction as defined by this article shall be subject to the pro- 
visions of section 635 of the Education Law, and a minor over 
sixteen years of age who fails to attend upon instruction as 
required by this act may be punished for any such violation by a 
fine not exceeding ten dollars, or by imprisonment for not more 
than ten days, or by both such fine and imprisonment. 

i Any person, firm or corporation employing a minor between 
the ages of fourteen years and eighteen years shall permit the 
attendance of such minor upon a jjart-time school or class when- 
ever such part-time school or class shall have been established in 
the city or district where the minor resides or may be employed, 
and upon the termination of employment of any such minor the 
employer shall return within three days the employment certifi- 
cate of such minor by mail to the *hool authorities, and a per- 
son, firm or corporation employing a minor over fourteen years 
of age antl less than eighteen years of age contrary to the pro- 
visions of this article shall be subject to a fine of not less than 
twenty-five dollars and not more than one hundred dollars for each 
offense or by imprisonment in the city or county jail for not less 
than five days and not more than ten days, or by such fine and 
imprisonment at the discretion of the court. A person, firm or 
corporation, which has in its employ a minor who fails to attend 
a part-time or continuation school or class as required herein, shall 
immediately discontinue the services of such minor upon receiving 
from the school authorities written notice of the failure of such 
minor to attend such part-time or continuation school or class, and 
a person, firm or corporation violating this provision of law shall 
be subject to a fine of fifty dollars for each offense, 

j The board of education of e«ch city or district having a 
population of five thousand or more inhabitants is hereby required 
to enforce the provisions of this law and the Commissioner of Edu- 
cation is hereby charged with the duty and vested with necessary 
authority to supervise the enforcement and administration of this 
act. [Amended hy L. 1919. cli. 531.] 



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